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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

free traffic, free website, free business, can I succeed

http://www.edrugsearch.com/edsblog/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/free-prescription-drugs.gif


About 6 months ago, I stumbled upon The Surf Craze (Auto Surf and Manual Surf) and I was surprised to see this kind of advertising, So I picked my self a small website or affiliate site and added it to as many surf sites as possible and I would spend hours with as many windows open as possible jumping from site to site trying to surf as many as possible in return for my site to be seen and receive hits (with out much success), then I seen this other site something about these safelists, So I jumped on board the safelist craze, I luckily found some of the better safelists and signed up to about 5 and I was bombarded by offers"make a million" "email 700 000 000 members spam free" "blast 2000 000 blogs" "your ad' seen by millions" after reading all these great emails I jumped on board a few and purchased a few websites, "I was going to be a millionaire in NO TIME, after all that was "Promised", so I started using all these great blasters and safelists (surfing was over now).

I am/was a couple hundred dollars down now and had nothing to show, apart from 100s of ebooks, a few blasters and some websites, so I purchased some scripts and set up multiple websites, BUT still no traffic from all these blasters and apparent "millions of emails sent".
So I stooped and thought what a crock and then came the "email blasters" I subscribed to 5-6 different email blasters (each one bragged a total 0f 2000 plus safelists and millions of combined members) I was spending hours upon hours signing up to safelists and confirming addresses, finding larger email boxes, This time I was set to make money (apparent Millions as promised) after all I was sending apparently close to a BILLION emails and blogs a day, BUT still no response.

So here I am today a little wiser and subscription free, promoting my new website based on all free products, sites, software, hosting, domain names, websites, add ons, scripts and of course a lot of free advertising, trying to see what I can do for free and only using freebies gathered from the net.


Of course traffic is building up and I may have to invest in an upgrade to handle the traffic, so I may have to dip into my pockets after all.

Conclusion:

Safelist Blasters:
End up getting spammed daily or more by Safelist Host.
Most email ends up in trash by auto cleaners.

Assorted "million email blasters"
Go to no-one and waste of cash.
Who are those millions of recipients?

Blog Blaster.
Claimed to reach 2 million blogs, but only reaches 500 max' per blast.
Most/all blogs require registration and confirmation anyway.

Classified Blaster.
Required the same as above.
Most/all Classifieds require registration.

Written by Jason Godwell.

Google Is Much More Than A Search Engine

http://aflams.unblog.fr/files/2008/04/google1.jpg

We all know that Google is the dominant search engine, and controls a large percentage of online advertising. But many of us -- even regular Google users -- are not aware of some of Google's other services. Most of them are presented as new ways of listing and categorizing the universe.

However, consistent with Google's new status as a profit-first public corporation, what lies at the root of most of Google's expanding ventures is the need to become less dependent on context-based advertising revenue. In other words, the people at Google are desparately looking for new ways of making money.

**Froogle still looking for a mission in life

Google's product search and comparison tool called Froogle, was launched in December 2002. It was developed in an attempt to cash in on the obvious market for online shopping that major sites like eBay and Amazon had so successfully exploited.

Unlike alternatives like eBay, Froogle lists products for free, and it has no integrated purchase capability. You just look for products by product name or description and are presented with a list of products with links to sites where they are available.

Product information gets into Froogle in one of two ways, according to the Froogle instructions. It can be submitted electronically by merchants, and will then be included in the database. Second, in the course of spidering the web Google's spidering software "automatically identifies webpages that offer products for sale". These are then included in the Froogle database as well.

What Google wants is to make Froogle a product search tool of choice, and open up various monetization opportunities. The obvious ones are embedded advertising and paid listings, but others include direct sales possibilities on the eBay model.

After more than three years Froogle is still called a "beta" suggesting that Google still has no definite plans for it. The latest development was to add "local shopping" information to the listings giving Froogle potential to become an online yellow pages.

**Google Local integrates maps, local product search

Everybody agrees that local search is going to be very big in the next couple of years. Say you're looking for a place to buy an digital camera in a particular city. Just do a search for "digital camera in MyTown", and Google Local will give you a detailed street map of the area along with stores that carry the product, and locations indicated on the map.

Since products are indexed by keyword, you can search for virtually anything, rather than being restricted to the categories pre-defined by a service like the yellow pages.

Also unlike the yellow pages, Google Local includes all stores they have a listing for, not just paying advertisers. Local gives you a map with locations, plus listings with links direct to the stores. The potential for this resource seems awesome.

Plus Google Local has integrated a very slick map utility that arguably looks better (simpler) and in some ways, works faster than other services such as MapQuest. For instance, you can search for a relatively obscure place like Carlyle, Saskatchewan or Brora, Scotland and you are taken to a detailed street map for the entire region. If you are looking for a broader overview of the area, you can just grab the map and scroll along a highway or the coast without having to click on navigation arrows as you do with MapQuest.

Google has also integrated its satellite imaging service into Local. If you are looking at a specific map and would rather see a satellite image of the area, just click on "satellite". Or if you would like to see the satellite image with a map overlay, you can see that too, by clicking on "hybrid".

**Google Video lets you put your videos online

Google Video was introduced in beta back in the spring of 2005, ostensibly to give video producers an outlet for their work. As Google says, "Whether you produce hundreds of titles a year or just a few, you can give your videos the recognition and visibility they deserve by promoting them on Google - for free. Signing up for the Google Video Upload Program will connect your work with users who are most likely to want to view them."

No doubt Google has something else in mind here too -- providing video-related services to generate revenue. The logical move is for Google to eventually build a large library of amateur and then commercially produced videos and moves that it can "rent" on a pay-per-view basis. The company has already taken a step in this direction with its recent AOL alliance in which it committed to promoting AOL's video library.

As John Battelle said in a (http://battellemedia.com/archives/001658.php) June 2004 blog post, "this will help the spread of an alternative universe for video distribution and playback, one independent of the walled garden business model in which video is currently locked... the sooner independent voices have an outlet for their work, and a business model to pay for it, the sooner we'll see content creators revolt from the hegemony of cable and studio models."

But there are other possibilities as well. As Jon Udell says in a (http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/2005/12/06.html) blog post, "the larger goal is to bring the social effects we see at work in the textual blogosophere into the realm of audio. Linking and quotation drive discovery and shared discourse, but media formats, players, and hosting environments are notoriously hostile to linking and quotation, and I'd really like to see that change."

Google made a move in this direction by switching its player technology to Flash in the fall of 2005. While encoding options for flash (FLV) are still relatively limited, the capabilities to make flash movies more "link-friendly" are much better than the other mainstream alternatives (Quicktime, Windows Media, and Real).

In other words, it is much easier to build hot links and other types of scripting into video and audio using Flash, making it a much better fit with the traditional "interactive" features we expect from the web.

This also gives it more potential for the integration of advertising into pre-existing videos.



Google Is Much More Than A Search Engine

We all know that Google is the dominant search engine, and controls a large percentage of online advertising. But many of us -- even regular Google users -- are not aware of some of Google's other services. Most of them are presented as new ways of listing and categorizing the universe.

However, consistent with Google's new status as a profit-first public corporation, what lies at the root of most of Google's expanding ventures is the need to become less dependent on context-based advertising revenue. In other words, the people at Google are desparately looking for new ways of making money.

**Froogle still looking for a mission in life

Google's product search and comparison tool called Froogle, was launched in December 2002. It was developed in an attempt to cash in on the obvious market for online shopping that major sites like eBay and Amazon had so successfully exploited.

Unlike alternatives like eBay, Froogle lists products for free, and it has no integrated purchase capability. You just look for products by product name or description and are presented with a list of products with links to sites where they are available.

Product information gets into Froogle in one of two ways, according to the Froogle instructions. It can be submitted electronically by merchants, and will then be included in the database. Second, in the course of spidering the web Google's spidering software "automatically identifies webpages that offer products for sale". These are then included in the Froogle database as well.

What Google wants is to make Froogle a product search tool of choice, and open up various monetization opportunities. The obvious ones are embedded advertising and paid listings, but others include direct sales possibilities on the eBay model.

After more than three years Froogle is still called a "beta" suggesting that Google still has no definite plans for it. The latest development was to add "local shopping" information to the listings giving Froogle potential to become an online yellow pages.

**Google Local integrates maps, local product search

Everybody agrees that local search is going to be very big in the next couple of years. Say you're looking for a place to buy an digital camera in a particular city. Just do a search for "digital camera in MyTown", and Google Local will give you a detailed street map of the area along with stores that carry the product, and locations indicated on the map.

Since products are indexed by keyword, you can search for virtually anything, rather than being restricted to the categories pre-defined by a service like the yellow pages.

Also unlike the yellow pages, Google Local includes all stores they have a listing for, not just paying advertisers. Local gives you a map with locations, plus listings with links direct to the stores. The potential for this resource seems awesome.

Plus Google Local has integrated a very slick map utility that arguably looks better (simpler) and in some ways, works faster than other services such as MapQuest. For instance, you can search for a relatively obscure place like Carlyle, Saskatchewan or Brora, Scotland and you are taken to a detailed street map for the entire region. If you are looking for a broader overview of the area, you can just grab the map and scroll along a highway or the coast without having to click on navigation arrows as you do with MapQuest.

Google has also integrated its satellite imaging service into Local. If you are looking at a specific map and would rather see a satellite image of the area, just click on "satellite". Or if you would like to see the satellite image with a map overlay, you can see that too, by clicking on "hybrid".

**Google Video lets you put your videos online

Google Video was introduced in beta back in the spring of 2005, ostensibly to give video producers an outlet for their work. As Google says, "Whether you produce hundreds of titles a year or just a few, you can give your videos the recognition and visibility they deserve by promoting them on Google - for free. Signing up for the Google Video Upload Program will connect your work with users who are most likely to want to view them."

No doubt Google has something else in mind here too -- providing video-related services to generate revenue. The logical move is for Google to eventually build a large library of amateur and then commercially produced videos and moves that it can "rent" on a pay-per-view basis. The company has already taken a step in this direction with its recent AOL alliance in which it committed to promoting AOL's video library.

As John Battelle said in a (http://battellemedia.com/archives/001658.php) June 2004 blog post, "this will help the spread of an alternative universe for video distribution and playback, one independent of the walled garden business model in which video is currently locked... the sooner independent voices have an outlet for their work, and a business model to pay for it, the sooner we'll see content creators revolt from the hegemony of cable and studio models."

But there are other possibilities as well. As Jon Udell says in a (http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/2005/12/06.html) blog post, "the larger goal is to bring the social effects we see at work in the textual blogosophere into the realm of audio. Linking and quotation drive discovery and shared discourse, but media formats, players, and hosting environments are notoriously hostile to linking and quotation, and I'd really like to see that change."

Google made a move in this direction by switching its player technology to Flash in the fall of 2005. While encoding options for flash (FLV) are still relatively limited, the capabilities to make flash movies more "link-friendly" are much better than the other mainstream alternatives (Quicktime, Windows Media, and Real).

In other words, it is much easier to build hot links and other types of scripting into video and audio using Flash, making it a much better fit with the traditional "interactive" features we expect from the web.

This also gives it more potential for the integration of advertising into pre-existing videos.



Get Paid Through Online Surveys

http://genuinecashmaker.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/survey.jpg

How many times have you closed or blocked pop-ups inviting you to take a survey? And not just any survey, you'll also get payment for taking them. Think about the times you dismiss these advertisements thinking they are just nonsense and worse, Spams. It might surprise you but there is truth in what these ads are telling you all along. You can get paid by answering surveys on the Net. Paid surveys, online surveys, surveys for cash, whatever you call it. They are companies' means to determine the existence of a market for their products.

Large companies spend and invest huge amounts of cash annually for these advertising deals. Surely, they don't want to waste that much money on ineffective advertising programs. Compared to the money they would lose if the campaigns or the product turned out to be ineffective and a flop, paying you to give them a consumer's feedback is not a big deal. But these companies would not want to disrupt their daily operations to conduct these surveys themselves. As a result, they hire another company, a "middleman" to facilitate market research.There are numerous sites that are willing to give you money for joining in their online surveys. These sites or companies do market research for large corporations for a price. They aim to determine if their clients' products will be a hit to the consumers or a flop. They are also tasked to learn what consumers like about the product, or what they like to change about it. These paid surveys, online surveys, surveys for cash, and polling sites also gauge the efficiency and effectivity of their clients' advertising campaigns.

However, do not think that earning a living through paid surveys, online surveys, surveys for cash, and polling sites. There are common misconceptions and exaggerations about answering paid surveys on the `Net. Aside from sending out a minimum of two to five surveys monthly, many advertisers and teasers may state that earning $250 per hour in doing paid online surveys is possible. Although this possibility is not discounted, ordinary paid surveys will give you around two bucks to a twenty. Large payments usually come from sites doing intensive research like focus groups or product trials. Though not a stable source of steady income, these surveys are a great way to earn extra money.

Signing up for these surveys are also very easy. If you don't wish to pay fees then skip databases and company directories that require payments for their use. There are numerous databases and sites that offer these directories for free. Though this directories don't send you surveys, they have lists of companies who are currently doing market research which you may join. Remember, in making significant money doing paid surveys, online surveys, surveys for cash, and polling sites join as many as you can. No non-compete clause to be signed anyway.



How to earn with Google Adsense!

http://smingr.com/images/logo-adsense.jpg
If you have your own website, you can earn a good amount of money through Google Adsense. What do you have to do to earn money from your website? Nothing, really. You just have to re-post, in your site, the ads that Google has posted in its search engine pages. Here's how it works.

How does it work?

Every time you fire a Google search, alongside the search results, you find a few links displayed under the heading 'sponsored links.' Well, these are links that the advertisers pay Google for displaying. They do not, however, pay a fixed amount for keeping those ads there, but a certain amount for every time a visitor clicks on the link and visits the advertiser's site. This way, the advertiser only pays when someone actually clicks on the link, Google gets money for putting up the links, and the visitor gets to know of related links that could give him relevant and additional information and/or services. It's a win-win situation for everyone involved in the game.

Where do you come in?

Google reasoned that anyone, who visited a third party site that held content relevant to a particular search, would be interested in the sponsored links that it provided along these search results. So it decided to extend the group to include sites that have similar content, by allowing these sites to display ads and links that would be redirected to the sponsored links of Google. That opened up an easy way to increase the traffic to the advertiser's site by increasing his exposure, while the site owner gets money for just posting the ad in her site.

What do you have to do to take advantage?

If you already have a running site that ha a good traffic, you may have to do practically nothing. All you have to do is copy and paste some HTML code into your pages. That's all! The ads will appear on your site and every time someone clicks on those ads, you get your share

How much money can you make?

That's not very easy to answer, because there's no single answer to that question. It all depends on a combination of factors like keywords, the page number where the links appear, and the demand for the day. Whatever the going rate, Google passes on a part of the revenue that it gets from your site to you. You can see at any point of time and on any day, how much money you've made.

You can be sure of one thing, though. You're not going to lose money by posting the ad in your site. Whatever the revenue, it's an additional amount that you get from the site for no additional cost.

What if you don't have a site?

You can still benefit from this scheme if you don't already have a site. You will of course, need to put up a site in that case. You can put up a site easily and at a fairly low cost. First of all you should decide on the content of your site. If you're thinking of duplicating someone else's site by copying their contents, that wouldn't work. Your site will have to be original, although its contents may be similar to that of other sites.

If you are putting up a fresh site, you'll need to estimate the costs of putting up the site and maintaining it against the revenues that you'll get. The secret is in getting good traffic to your site. So you should concentrate on building an attractive site and find out ways of attracting traffic to it. The rest will then follow.




How to earn money online

http://make-money-online-athome.com/Free-Money-Online/images/left1.jpg

Affiliate programs
A lot of companies on the web allow you to sell their products and get a commission on the sale. They take care of the product and you take care of getting clients for them. They usually give you a special link with your refferal code in it so you can refer clients.

Investment programs
You can invest your money on investment program like hyip or on the forex or stock market. But if you invest in a hyip, make sure it’s reliable because a lot of them close after sometime running away with your money. Investing can be very dangerous so be careful!

Paid surveys
Be paid for your opinion! Some companies pay money, some give you gift certificate and some give you the chance to be in a drawing. Unfortunately, most of them are only available for US residents.

Reselling
You can resell service like webhosting or domain names. With reselling you can set your price but you have to take care of the technical support and billing. It’s a good way to start your own little business because you can control everything and your business can easily grow.

Place ads on your site
A lot of programs allow you to make money by placing ads on your site. You can earn money for each or for each impression of the ads.

Starting a scam site
This is NOT the solution! Don’t even think about it.



How to Boost Your Online Business by Interacting with Visitors?

http://www.highimpact.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/dollar-and-mouse-300x283.jpg


Running an online business means depending on website visitors and online sales.


Online businesses usually try to replace every possible interaction among the seller and the buyer with automated functions. They try to provide customers with functionalities to search through products, change their attributes, inform themselves of features, add products to virtual shopping baskets and at the end – automatically check out and pay.

The whole process is dependent upon the credibility of your company in your customers’ eyes, their ability to find the desired product and make the purchase decision using the available information. According to this, the most important variable is your ability to anticipate their needs, provide the required information and reinforce credibility through the buying process.

Why not take things into your own hands?

Why not help your visitors and interact with them while buying and making decisions?

Why not be there for providing more information?

Why not show them that you care?

And why not do all this with the greatest of ease?

All those things can be done by using live chat support software. It will give your website the charm of the traditional store and you can “walk” with your customer through the site and give assistance when needed.

What can you improve by using live chat support?

You can help your customers to:

• find relevant information quickly on your e-commerce website;
• get additional information about your products and services;
• make quicker decisions when choosing products, by asking them certain questions and offering the best-suited product;
• reassure themselves about the trustworthiness of the website;
• and make the check-out and payment processes a ‘painless’ experience.

And you can help yourself to:

• increase sales
• provide visitors with exceptional online customer service;
• have an instant view of how many visitors are currently browsing your website;
• have an instant insight into how long they have stayed on each page;
• initiate chat with any visitor anytime;
• find out what your customers like / dislike about your products and company and take actions to reinforce or correct it;
• find out what kind of information you can add to your website or your FAQ and how to reorganize the content on the website;
• promote your special or seasonal offers proactively
• and many other gains depending on your type of business.

The whole point is to provide a two-way channel for communication. You provide your customers the answers they need and vice versa – they provide your company with valuable feed-back about their opinions and preferences.

Adding an interaction channel to an online business has the greatest benefits compared to brick & click and pure offline businesses, because there is no other channel for real time communication with customers.